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A64510 The third part of Modern reports being a collection of several special cases in the Court of Kings-Bench: in the last years of the reign of K. Charles II. In the reign of King James II. And in the two first years of his present Majesty. Together with the resolutions and judgments thereupon. None of these cases ever printed before. Carefully collected by a learned hand.; Reports. 1660-1726. Vol.3. England. Court of King's Bench. 1700 (1700) Wing T911; ESTC R222186 312,709 406

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may forfeit their Charter by it Now I do not deny but it is the Duty of the Mayor and it is the equal Duty of the Aldermen to see a time be appointed for an Election And as the Mayor is the Chief in pre-eminence so it aggravates his neglect if he refuses it But his neglect of his Duty will not excuse the rest of the Electors for the not doing of their Duty and the performing of their Qaths If it be said What if they do not agree upon the time but are divided I Answer Whoever can carry an Election when they are met and chuse shall also govern in the time of meeting if there be any difference about it and that is not the Mayor but the Major pars eorum c. Now this agrees with the Rule of the Law in the like Cases In a Commission of the Peace to try Felonies c. And to hold a Court of quarter-Quarter-Sessions Who shall issue out the Summons and appoint the Time Answ Those that constitute the Court and are to Exercise the Power must issue out the Summons If twenty Iustices of the Peace not having one of the Quorum amongst them should issue out a Summons for a General quarter-Quarter-Sessions it would be void for twenty Iustices of the Peace cannot hold such a Sessions if there be not one of the Quorum among them Nor can the Custos Rotulorum alone do it though he is commonly most Eminent Thus is it in the Commission of Gaol-Delivery and of Dyer and Terminer We may see the Forms of them in Crompt Jurisd of Courts f. 121 125. The express words of their Commission for appointing time and place Ad certum diem quem vos tres vel duo vestrum Quorum vos A. B. C. D. unum esse volumus ad hoc provederitis And therefore there was no need of any more express Provision in the Charter for a Summons for an Election of an Alderman or the appointing of a time In the next place for the necessity of the Mayor's being present as well as their meeting by his Summons I see no reason for it It is true there is a Case in Print that seems to make for it tho' I never yet heard it so much as mention'd either at the Trial for I was not there or throughout the whole Case yet it is fit for me to take notice of it for I make no doubt but before we have done we shall hear of it It is in Serjeant Rolls's Abridgment Part I. Tit. Corporation f. 513 514. Case 5 6 7. Between Hicks and the Borough of Launceston in Cornwal Resolved per Curiam which were only two Iudges viz. the Chief Iustice Richardson and Iustice Croke no other of the Iudges being there That if a Corporation consists of a Mayor and eight Aldermen with a Clause in the Patent That if any of the Aldermen dye that then the Mayor and the rest of the Aldermen within eight days after shall Elect another though it be not limited that they or the greater number of them may elect yet the greater number of them may elect And if the Mayor at the time of the death of an Alderman be absent at London till after the eight days and the rest of the Aldermen within eight days come to the Deputy Mayor and require him to make an Assembly of them to elect another within the eight days and he refuse and upon that the greater number of the Aldermen meet without the Mayor or his Deputy and Elect an Alderman that it is a void Election for the Mayor ought to be present at it by the Words of the Grant This seems to be a stronger Case than ours for there is a certain time limited by which they must make their Election viz. eight days I first Observe That this Case as far as I can find was not a Case depending by any Suit or Action for in that Case it is said That a Writ was granted to make a new Election of an Alderman So that I suppose it was upon a Motion only I have a Copy of the Rules which shews it to be so as I take it Then it does not appear to be upon an Argument for had it beén so two Iudges I presume would not have determin'd it but have put it off till the Court had been full as usually they do therefore it was not so solemn nor has not so great Authority But take it as it is The time of eight days being limited by which the Election was to be made makes the Case never a whit the stronger for there the Iudges declare that there may be an Election after the eight days and the limiting that time was to quicken them Then observe the ground those two Iudges went upon they do not say it ought to be so at the Common Law as doubtless they would had they thought that the Common Law would have ruled it for if the Common Law serves for it it was idle to resort to any other ground But the Iudges in the Case of Launceston say that the Mayor must be present at the Election by the Words of the Grant So that they went by that Rule which I have urged which is the words of the Grant 't is the Charter only must give the Rule as I have Argued all this while Now what the words of the Charter were in the Case of Launceston does not appear in the Report of that Case Perhaps there was an express Provision in the Charter requiring the meeting of the Aldermen by the Summons of the Mayor and in his presence which if so then there is no disputing against it And the drawer of the Indictment against us has so drawn it as if the Charter in our Case did so require it too But there is nothing to that purpose nay as I have observ'd there are concomitant Clauses that give another construction and argue to the contrary Therefore the Case of Launceston differs from ours But there is another thing wherein the Case of Launceston and ours differs I am no Enemy to the Government I Live under if any man think otherwise of me I care not because I cannot govern another Man's Thoughts I do agree that this Sovereign Court of the King's Bench as is resolv'd in James Bagg 's Case hath a super-intendency and a special Authority in Cases of this nature which more concern matter of Government and the publick Peace and Order than any Man 's private Right or Property And in such Cases this Court governs it self much by the Circumstances of the Case Now let us mind the Circumstances of the Case Reported by Serjeant Rolls and of our Case and let them be compar'd and there will be a very wide difference between them And therein I dare appeal to any rational unbiass'd Man in the World for the Innocency of our proceedings in the whole matter The Mayor in the Case of Launceston happen'd to be in London at the death
ground he had for such an Opinion is not known the Year Books quoted in the Margent will not warrant it for they are in no sort parallel That Case in the 27th of H. 27 H. 6.3 6. is no more than Tenant at Will cannot grant over his Estate because he hath no certain or fixed Interest in it and much to the same purpose is the Book of 22 E. 22 E. 4.5 4. there cited But suppose this to be a void Grant and to amount to a determination of the Tenancy at Will yet if the Trustees had no notice of it that shall not determine their Estates A Devise to an Executor that he shall have the oversight of the Testators Estate till his Daughter should come of Age Yelv. 73. the Executor made a Lease at Will rendring Rent before the year expired the Daughter came of age to whom the Tenant at Will attorned the Executor brought an Action of Debt against him for the Rent arrear it was held that this Attornment to the Daughter was no determination of his Will for it would be of ill consequence to the Lessor if such a Tenant should determine his Will a day or two before the end of the year who had enjoyed all the Profits of the Land 2. Whether he may make a Deputy 'T is true a judicial Officer cannot make a Deputy unless he hath a Clause in his Patent to enable him because his Judgment is relied on in matters relating to his Office which might be the reason of the making of the Grant to him neither can a Ministerial Officer depute one in his stead if the Office be to be performed by him in person but when nothing is required but a Superintendency in the Office he may make a Deputy This appears more evident in the common Case of a Sheriff who is an Officer made by the Kings Letters Patents and 't is not said that he shall execute his Office per se vel sufficientem Deputatum suum Roll. Rep. 274. 1 Leon. 146. 3 Leon. 99. Cro. Eliz. 173. yet he may make a Deputy which is the Vnder-Sheriff against whom Actions may be brought by the Parties grieved And such a Deputy may be made without a Deed for he claims no Interest in the Office but as a Servant Cro. Eliz. 67. 10 Co. 192. a. and therefore where an Action on the Case was brought against the Deputy of a Sheriff for an Escape who pleaded that the Sheriff made him his Deputy to take Bail of Prisoners and that he took Bond c. and shewed no Deed of Deputation yet the Plea was held good upon a Demurrer 3. Whether the Assignment of this Trust without giving notice to this Court be a Forfeiture Tenant in Fee simple may do it for he hath a power so to do by reason of the Dignity of his Estate He who grants this Office without acquainting of this Court therewith must remain an Officer still and is subject to all Duties and Attendance till the Court hath notice of the Grant But there is no occasion of acquainting the Court in this Case for upon the Grant made to the Trustees by Mr. Lenthal he is still the Officer though he hath not the same Estate It was objected that Sir Edward Norris c. hath not said any thing to the Escapes but that doth neither concern Mr. Lenthal or the Trustees 2 Cro. 17. for if he be Tenant at Will they are not answerable for his neglect for 't is a personal Tort in him If Tenant for years makes a Feoffment 't is a Forfeiture of his Estate but if he makes a Lease and Release though 't is of the same operation yet it will not amount to a Forfeiture Now if any Escapes should happen there is a plain remedy for the Parties agrieved for if Tenant at Will remaineth in possession of an Office and suffers voluntary Escapes his Office shall be seised into the Hands of this Court then he in the Reversion must make his Claim and when that is done he is an Officer nolens volens and this was the Duke of Norfolk's Case Now though these Escapes are found by the Inquisition to be voluntary yet they are answered in the Plea for that part of the Inquisition is traversed and that they were vi armis and this being not yet tried the Court cannot give Iudgment thereon If there be many negligent Escapes these shall not amount to a Forfeiture as if a Rebel should break Prison or the Prison should be on Fire those are negligent but the Officer should not be so much as fined But if it should be a Forfeiture the Neglect must be particularly alledged for the Word Neglect is too general Adjornatur 5 E. 4.27 Dyer 66. Anonymus A Man was indicted for using of a Trade not being an Apprentice An Indictment quashed for misreciting of a Statute against the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 4. And now a Motion was made to quash it because the Act gives power to two Iustices of the Peace Quorum unus to hear and determine Offences committed against any branch thereof either by Indictment or Information before them in their Sessions and 't is not said that one of the Iustices before whom this Indictment was taken was of the Quorum This Objection was answered by the Court that the Sessions cannot be kept without one Iustice of the Quorum The Act saith That it shall not be lawful to any person other than such who did then lawfully use any Art Mystery or Manual Occupation to set up any Trade used within this Realm except he had been an Apprentice for seven years c. and 't is not averred that the Trade mentioned in the Indictment was a Trade used before the making of the Act. This seemed to be a material Objection but the Indictment was quashed for misreciting of the Statute Price versus Davies ERror to reverse a Fine taken by Commission and the Error assigned was that the Cognizor died before the return of the Writ of Covenant But this Point was not argued because Iustice Allybon was of Opinion that the Plaintiff in the Errors had not well entituled himself by the Writ for it was brought by him ut Consanguineus Haeres scilicet Filius c. but doth not shew how he was of Kindred To this Objection Sir William Williams the Solicitor General replyed that if a Descent be from twenty Ancestors 't is not necessary to say that he was Son and Heir of such a one who was Son and Heir of such a one and so to the twentieth Ancestor Agreable to this are all the Presidents in Formedons 't is only said that Jus descendit Adjornatur The Countess of Plymouth versus Throgmorton ERror to reverse a Iudgment in the Common Pleas in an Action of Debt upon a Mutuatus brought by Mr. Contract where 't is entire shall not be separated in an Action of Debt Throgmorton as Executor
of setting of so many Letters together but filling up the Blanks makes them of another nature Grants of things of less moment have been adjudged Monopolies 2 Rol. Abr. 215. pl. 5. as a Patent for the sole making of all Bills Pleas and Briefs in the Council of York for by the same reason a like Patent might be granted to make all Declarations in the Courts of Westminster Hall Curia The King hath a Prerogative to Grant the sole Printing to a particular person all the Cases cited for the Plaintiff do not reach the reason of this Case for there is a difference between things of a publick Vse and those which are publick in their Nature even Almanacks have been used to ill purposes as to foretel future Events yet they are of publick Vse to shew the Feasts and Fasts of the Church The Court enclined that the Patent was not good Jackson versus Warren A Motion was made in arrest of Iudgment Amendment for that the day when the Assises were to be held and the place where were left out of the Distringas and so a mis-tryal But the Court were of another Opinion 1 Roll. Abr. 201. for if there had been no Distringas the Tryal had been good because they Jurata is the Warrant to try the Cause which was right and therefore the Distringas was ordered to be amended by the Roll. Dominus Rex versus Sparks 'T IS Enacted by the Statute of 1 Eliz. Where a Punishment is directed by a Statute the Judgment must be pursuant 1 Eliz. cap. 2.13 14 Car. 2. cap. 4. That every Minister shall use the Church-Service in such Form as is mentioned in the Book of Common-Prayer and if he shall be convicted to use any other Form he shall forfeit one whole Years profit of all his Spiritual Promotions and suffer six Months Imprisonment And by the Statute of King Charles the II. All Ministers are to use the publick Prayers in such Order and Form as is mentioned in the Common-Prayer-Book with such Alterations as have been made therein by the Convocation then sitting The Defendant was indicted at the Quarter-Sessions in Devonshire for using alias Preces in the Church alio modo than mentioned in the said Book and concludes contra formam Statuti He was found Guilty and fined 100 Marks and upon a Writ of Error brought Mr. Polexfen and Mr. Shower argued for the Plaintiff in Error that this Indictment was not warranted by any Law and the Verdict shall not help in the case of an Indictment for all the Statutes of Jeofails have left them as they were before Now the Fact as 't is said in this Indictment may be no offence because to use Prayers alio modo than enjoyn'd by the Book of Common-Prayer may be upon an extraordinary occasion and so no Crime But if this should not be allowed the Iustices of Peace have not power in their Sessions to enquire into this matter or if they had power they could not give such a Iudgment because the punishment is directed by the Statute and of this Opinion was the whole Court The Chief Iustice said that the Statute of the 23 Eliz. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. could have no influence upon this Case because another Form is now enjoyned by later Statutes but admitted that Offences against that Statute were enquitable by the Iustices The Indictment ought to have alledged that the Defendant used other Forms and Prayers instead of those enjoyned which were neglected by him for otherwise every Parson may be indicted that useth prayers before his Sermon other than such which are required by the Book of Common-Prayer Clerk versus Hoskins DEbt upon a Bond for the performance of Covenants in certain Articles of Agreement in which it was recited That whereas the now Defendant had found out a Mystery in colouring Stuffs and had entred into a Partnership with the Plaintiff for the term of seven Years he did thereupon Covenant with him that he would not procure any person to obtain Letters Patents within that Term to exercise that Mystery alone The Defendant pleaded that he did not procure any person to obtain Letters Patents c. The Plaintiff replied and assigned for breach that the Defendant did within that term procure Letters Patents for another person to use this Mystery alone for a certain time Et hoc petit quod inquiratur per patriam And upon a Demurrer to the Replication these Exceptions were taken 1. That the Plaintiff hath not set forth what Term is contained in the Letters Patents 2. That he had pleaded both Record and Fact together for the procuring is the Fact and the Letters Patents are the Record and then he ought not to have concluded to the Country Prout patet per Recordum To which it was answered That the Plaintiff was a Stranger to the Term contained in the Letters Patents and therefore could not possibly shew it but if he hath assigned a full breach 't is well enough Then as to the other Exception viz. the pleading of the Letters Patents here is not matter of Record here is a plain negative and affirmative upon which the Issue is joyned and therefore ought to conclude hoc petit c. Curia There is a Covenant that the Defendant shall not procure Letters Patents to hinder the Plaintiff within the seven Years of the Partnership Now this must be the matter upon which the breach ariseth and not the Letters Patents so that it had been very improper to conclude prout patet per Recordum Iudgment for the Plaintiff Rex versus Hethersal THE Defendant was Felo de se Melius inquireddum not granted but for misdemeanor of the Jury and the Coroners Inquest found him a Lunatick and now Mr. Jones moved for a Melius inquirendum but it was denied because there was no defect in the Inquisition but the Court told him that if he could produce an Affidavit that the Iury did not go according to their Evidence or of any indirect Proceedings of the Coroner then they would grant it But it was afterwards quashed because they had omitted the year of the King Friend versus Bouchier Trin. 34 Car. 2. Rot. 920. EJectment upon the Demise of Henry Jones What words in a Will make a general Tail of certain Lands in Hampshire The Iury found this Special Verdict following Viz. That William Holms was seised in Fee of the Lands in question who by his last Will dated in the year 1633. devised it to Dorothy Hopkins for Life Remainder to her first Son and to the Heirs of the Body of such first Son c. and for default of such Issue to his Cousin W. with several Remainders over And in default of such Issue to Anne Jones and to her Heirs who was the Lessor of the Plaintiff That before the sealing and publishing of this Will he made this Memorandum Viz. Memorandum that my Will and Meaning is That Dorothy Hopkins
before a Coroner the person having drowned himself it was suffocat ' emergit fuit if it had stood singly upon the word emergit it had been insensible but the word suffocat ' expressing the sense it was held good 100 4. Where nothing is vested in the King before Office found ibid. 5. It must always be found that there is an Estate in the person offending and a cause of Forfeiture of that Estate to vest it in the King 336 Interest in a thing See Pardon 4. Where a Man may have an interest in a Chattel without a Property 61 2. Devise to a Wife and Children after Debts and Legacies paid an interest vests in the Devisees but 't is otherwise in case of Administration for there no Interest vests till actual distribution 65 3. A Man may have a Property tho' not in himself as in the Case of Joyntenancy 97 Intestate See Administration Innuendo The proper office of it is to make the subject matter certain 53 2. It will not help insensible words 54 Joyntenancy and Tenancy in Common See Abatement 3. Baron and Feme 12. Interest 3. If one Joyntenant bring an Action against the other unless he pleads the Jointenancy in abatement the Plaintiff will recover 97 2. If two Coparceners lease a House and the Rent is arrear and one brings an Action and recovers Judgment shall be arrested because both ought to joyn 109 3. Tenants in Common must join in the personalty but 't is otherwise in real Actions for though their Estates are several yet the Damages to be recovered survive to all 109 251 4. Where one Commoner may bring an Action against his Fellow 251 Joint Action See Action for a wrong 6. Ioyntenancy 2 3. Where an Action may be joint or several at the Election of the Plaintiff 86 2. Where 't is brought against three Defendants who plead jointly the Jury may sever the Damages and the Plaintiff may take Execution de melioribus damnis as well as where their Pleas are several and Tryals at several times 101 102 3. Judgment against two and one brought a Writ of Error and assigned the Infancy of the other for Error the Writ was abated because both did not joyn 134 4. The Defendants in the original Action must joyn in a Writ of Error but it seems otherwise where the Plaintiffs bring Error 135 5. Two covenant to sell Lands and the Purchasor agreed to pay the Mony to one of them he alone ought to bring the Action 263 6 Where there are several Proprietors of a Vessel for carriage of Goods which are damaged by carrying the Action must be brought against all or against the Master alone 321 322 7 Where two Tenants in Common were sued for not setting out of Tythes the Action ought to be brought not against him who set them out but against the other who carried them away 322 8. Two are bound joyntly one is sued he may plead in Abatement that he was bound with another but cannot plead Non est factum 323 9 In all Cases which are grounded upon Contracts the Parties who are Privies must be joyned in the Action ibid. 10 Action must be brought against all where a promise is created by Law 324 Issue Must be joyned upon an affirmative and a negative by concluding to the Country 80 Iudges The making altering and displacing of several Judges Serjeants at Law and King's Council 71 99 100 104 125 143 191 239 Iustices of Peace Offences against the Statute of 23 Eliz c. 1. for not coming to Church may be enquired of by them in their Sessions 79 2. Where a Statute appoints a thing finally to be done by them yet the Court of King's Bench may take Cognizance of it 95 3. Conviction for keeping of a Gun before a Justice of Peace the time when he had not 100 l. per Annum must be precisely alledged 280 Iustification See Pleading 4 5. Where 't is pleaded by way of Excuse to an Action of Trespass for the taking of any thing the Defendant must averr the Fact to be done and set forth the Warrant to him directed and the taking virtute Warranti and not generally that he took it by a Mandate c. 138 2. In Replevin where the Defendant made Conusance in right of the Lord he may Justifie the taking generally ibid. Iudgment 1. At the Common Law no Execution could be of a Judgment after a year and a day but the remedy was to bring an Action of Debt upon Judgment 187 189 2. Now a Scire Fac. is given upon a Judgment after the year by the Statue of W. 2. 189 3. When a Judgment is once execucuted the Goods are in custodia legis and shall not be taken away by an Exchequer Process or by the Commissioners of Bankrupts 236 L. Lapse See Notice Lease A Covenant in a Lease for years that the Lessee should pay the Rent without obliging his Executors or Administrators 't is determined by his Death 231 2. For 99 yeas if three persons or any of them so long live reserving a Rent and an Herriot upon the death of either the Beast of the Assignee shall not be taken for a Herriot for the Lessee is to pay his best Beast and that shall not be carried further than to the person named 231 Libel Where a Fine and Corporal punishment was imposed upon the Offender after Conviction 68 Limitation An Estate was setled upon Trustees to the use of A. and her Heirs provided she marry with the consent of Trustees remainder over to B. This is a Limitation and not a Condition 32 Limitation of Action See 21 Jac. 16. Where a Trespass is laid with a continuando for more than six years and the Statute pleaded and entire Damages it must be intended only for that which falls within the six years and that the Jury rejected the beginning of the Trespass 111 2. This Statute relates to a distinct and not to a continued Account 112 3. It provides a Remedy when the Plaintiff is beyond Sea at the time when his Right accrews and saves it till he returns whether it may be extended in a Case where the Defendant is beyond Sea longer than six years from the time the Plaintiff was entituled to the Action 311 312 Local Actions Whether Covenant will lie by an Assignee of a Reversion against an Assignee of a Lessee in any other place than where the Land lieth 337 2. Debitum contractus sunt nullius loci ibid. 3. Debt for Rent upon a Lease for years brought upon the Contract and Covenant between the same Parties are transitory ibid. 4. If Privity of Contract is gone by making an Assignment and only a privity in Law remains the Action must be brought in the County where the Land lieth ibid. M. Mayor See Corporation Marriage See Condition 3. Evidence 7. Limitation Notice A Maid above 12 and under 16 taken from Parents or Guardian and Married forfeits her Estate to the next in
the Land 211 5. Not granted for Mariners Wages 244 6. Libel for a Tax upon the Parishioners for not repairing of their Church who suggest that they had a Chappel of Ease in the same Parish the Prohibition was denied for of common right they ought to repair the Mother Church 264 7. Proof of Matter of Fact by one Witness denied to be allowed in the Spiritual Court is a good cause for a Prohibition 284 8. Where the Release of a Legacy offered to be proved by one Witness was denied in the Spiritual Court ibid. 9. Proof of Payment or Subtraction of Tythes denied and a Prohibition granted ibid. 10. Whether a Prohibition ought to be allowed after Sentence an Appeal being then the more proper remedy 284 Property See Interest Q. Quorum MUst be one Justice of the Peace of the Quorum otherwise cannot be a Sessions 14 152 Quantum meruit Will lie for Rent reserved upon a real Contract where the Sum is not certain but if a Sum in gross is reserved then Debt must be brought 73 R. Record ERror shall not be assigned against the Essence of a Record 141 Recovery Common Reversed without a Scire Facias to the Tertenants but it seems not to be good 119 2. For there must be a Scire Facias against the Heir and Tertenants when a Writ of Error is brought to reverse it 274 Relation Where an Estate shall pass by Relation where not 299 300 Release Of a Legacy by one Executor and also of all Actions Suits and Demands whatsoever those general words which follow are tied up to the Legacy and release nothing else 277 2. Of a Demand will not discharge a growing Rent 278 3. A Receipt was given for 10 l. in which there was a Release of all Actions Debts Duties and Demands nothing is released but the 10 l. 277 4. Judgment against four Defendants who all joyned in a Writ of Error and the Plaintiff pleaded a Release of Errors by one it shall not discharge the rest of a personal thing but if there had been four Plaintiffs to recover the Release or death of one is a Barr to all 109 135 249 5. A Release of all Actions will discharge an Award of Execution upon a Scieri Facias 185 187 6. Of all Actions and Demands doth not discharge a Legacy it must be by particular words 279 7. One of the Defendants who made Conusance released the Plaintiff after the taking of the Cattle this was held void upon a Demurrer for he had no Demand or Suit against the Plaintiff having distrained in the right of another ibid. Remainder See Entry 3. Fines levied 4. Must take place eo instanti the particular Estate is determined or else it can never arise 309 2. By the Conveyance of the Reversion in Fee to him who had the Estate for Life before the Birth of a Son the particular Estate is merged and all contingent Remainders are thereby destroyed 311 Replevin Where 't is brought by Writ the Sheriff cannot make deliverance without the taking of Pledges de prosequendo retorn ' Habend ' 35 Replication Where the Plaintiff confesseth and avoideth he ought not to traverse for that would make his Replication double 318 Request When a thing is to be done upon Request the time when the person requires it to be done is the time of the performance 295 Reservation Of a Rent upon a Lease for three years payable at Michaelmas and Lady-Day Debt was brought for 2 years without shewing at which of the Feasts it was due 't is good after Verdict but ill upon a Demurrer 70 Resignation See Abeiance To the Ordinary and Patron presented 'ts void if the Ordinary did not accept the Resignation 297 Reversion See Bargain and Sale Surrender 2. Tenant in Tail who had likewise the Reversion in Fee if he acknowledge a Judgment the Reversion may be extended 256 2. But a Reversion in Fee expectant upon an Estate Tail is not Assets until it comes into possession 257 3. By what words a Reversion in Fee passeth in a Will 228 Revocation A Will shall not be revoked by doubtful words 206 2. It might be revoked by Word without Writing before the Statute of Frauds 207 3. Before that Statute a Will might be revoked by a subsequent Will which was void in it self yet good to revoke the former 207 218 4. A subsequent Will which doth not appear shall not be any Revocation of a written Will which doth appear 204 205 206 5. Whether a subsequent Will which is void in it self may revoke another since the Statute of Frauds 218 6. Such a Will must be good in all circumstances to revoke a former 260 261 Riot See Information Robbery The Hundred was sued and it did not appear that the Parish where the Fact was laid to be done was in the Hundred or that it was done upon the High way or in the day time this was helped after Verdict 258 2. A Servant delivered Mony to a Quaker to carry home for his Master they were both robbed viz. the Servant of 26 s. and the Quaker of 106 l. the Servant made Oath of the Robbery and the Quaker refused the Master brought the Action it doth not lie for him 287 288 S. Scire Facias See Bail 3 4. Baron and Feme 1 4 5. Iudgment 2. Pledges 1. Recovery MUst be to the Tertenants before the Common Recovery shall be reversed by Writ of Error 119 2. Scieri Facias quare Executionem non habet recites the first Judgment but prays no new thing only to have Execution upon that Judgment 187 3. 'T is not an original but a judicial Writ and depends upon the first Judgment 187 4. 'T is suspended by Writ of Error and if the original Judgment is reversed that is so also ibid. 5. Debt will lie upon a Judgment had on a Scire Facias 188 189 6. A Judgment upon a Scire Facias is a distinct Action from the original cause 189 7. Judgment in Dower and a Writ of Enquiry of Damages the Woman marries and dies before the Writ of Enquiry executed the Husband administred and brought a Scire Facias upon the Judgment whether it lieth or not 281 Serjeants at Law See Iudges Surplusage See Inquisition Steward See Court Supersedeas See Parliament Surrender See Assent 1 2. Where it may be pleaded without an acceptance 297 2. No man can take it but he who hath the immediate Reversion 299 3. If pleaded without an Acceptance 't is aided after Verdict which shews 'tis no Substance 301 4. By one Non compos mentis 't is void ab initio 303 T. Tail DEvise to D. for Life the Remainder to her first Son and the Heirs of the Body of such first Son endorsed thus viz. Memorandum that D. shall not alien from the Heirs Males of her Body she had a Son who had Issue a Daughter 't is not an Estate Tail Male for the Memorandum shall not alter the Limitation in the Will
mistaken in that Action and being in the wrong was barred but that will be no Bar where a right Action is brought as if I deliver a Bond to another for advice who refusing to redeliver it I bring an Action of Trespass and am barred either by Verdict or Demurrer yet I may bring Detinue Trespass and Detinue are not the same Actions Pro Def. and therefore a Iudgment in one shall be no bar to the other but where two Actions are brought for one thing to be recovered in such case a Recovery in one shall be a bar to the other There is no substantial difference between Trespass and Trover for the disposing of the Goods in the one case is the same with the Conversion in the other the taking vi armis and likewise the Conversion are both tortious and therefore either Action may be well brought But for the Reasons given by the Plaintiffs Council he had Iudgment by the Opinion of the Chief Iustice and the other two Iudges Jones and Raymond of which Iustice Dolben did very much doubt Dominus Rex versus Sir Robert Atkins Knight of the Bath al' AN Indictment was found at the Quarter Sessions held for the County of the City of Bristol 4 Octob. 33 Car. 2. The County of the City of Bristol● against Sir Robert Atkins Knight of the Bath and Recorder and Senior Alderman of the said City Sir John Knight Alderman John Lawford Alderman and Joseph Creswick Alderman setting forth 1. That King Henry the VII th by his Charter dated 17 Decemb 15 Regni sui granted to the Mayor and Commonalty of the Town of Bristol the now City of Bristol being then a Town and to their Successors That if any shall procure abett or maintain any Debate and Discord upon the Election of the Mayor or other Minister he shall be punished instantly by the Mayor and two Aldermen to be chosen and named by the Mayor after the quantity and quality of his offence according to the Laws and Custom of the Realm 2. That according to the Priviledges granted by Queen Elizabeth to the Mayor and Commonalty of the said City and their Successors by Charter dated 28 June 23d of her Reign After which time as the Indictment sets forth the said Town was made a City there have been or ought to have been from the time of the making the said Charter twelve Aldermen whereof the Recorder was to be and now is one 3. That according to the Priviledges so as aforesaid granted by all the time aforesaid which is from the time of the Charter after the death of every Alderman the Mayor and the rest of the surviving Aldermen eorum major pars ad summonitionem of the said Mayor being called together have accustomed to choose another person of the circumspect Citizens to be an Alderman in the place of him so deceased and the Mayor and Aldermen by the same Privileges so granted have been and ought to be Iustices of the Peace for the said City 4. That continually after the time of the said Charter of Queen Elizabeth the Recorder and the rest of the Aldermen were and ought to be of the Privy Council de privato Concilio of the Mayor in particular Cases concerning the Government of the City whensoever the Mayor shall call them together And such Privy Council by all the time aforesaid which still is from the said Charter of Queen Elizabeth have not accustomed nor ought not to be called together to transact any Business belonging to that Council unless by the Summons and in the presence of the Mayor That after the death of one Sir John Lloyd being at his death an Alderman of the said City the said Sir Robert Atkins then being Recorder Sir John Knight John Lawford Esquire and Joseph Creswick being all Aldermen then of the City and free Burgesses of the City to make debate and discord upon the Election of an Alderman in the place of the Alderman so dead 8 March 33 Car. 2. in the Parish and Ward of St. Andrew within the said City did conspire to hold a Privy Council of the Aldermen of the said City and therein to choose an Alderman sine summonitione in absentia contra voluntatem Richardi Hart Militis then being Mayor of the City And in pursuance of their said wicked Conspiracy the day and year aforesaid entred by force and arms into the Tolzey and in the Chamber of the Council of the Mayor and Commonalty of the said City commonly called The Council House and there riotously c. did assemble and the same day and year they the said four Aldermen una cum aliis Aldermannis which must be two more Aldermen at the least which makes six and there were but five more in all then in being taking the Mayor in the said rest of the Aldermen not knowing their purposes held a Privy Council of Aldermen and then and there as much as in them lay chose Thomas Day for an Alderman in the place of Sir John Lloyd sine aliqua summonitione per praedictum Richardum Hart then Mayor to meet and in his absence and against his Will And they farther caused to be entred in the Common Council-Book the said Election as an Order of the Privy Council in which Book the Acts of the Mayor and Aldermen in their Privy Council are commonly written from whence great Discord hath risen c. Which Indictment was tryed at the Assises at Bristol by Nisi Prius and the Defendants found guilty and thereupon Sir Robert Atkins one of the Defendants having then lately before this Case been one of the Judges of the Common Pleas but then discharged of his Place after eight years sitting there secure came into the Court of Kings Bench and in Arrest of Iudgment argued his own Case not as Council nor at the Bar but in the Court in his Cloak having a Chair set for him by the Order of the Lord Chief Iustice and said as followeth 1. The Indictment in the first place mentions the Letters Patents of King H. 7. made to the Mayor and Commonalty of Bristol that the Mayor with two Aldermen such as he should choose should by their discretions according to Law punish such as should make debate and discord at the Elections of Officers They have not pursued this course against us but gone the ordinary way of Indictment and therefore I shall not need to speak to it 2. The Indictment in the next place proceeds to mention Letters Patents of Queen Elizabeth granted to the Mayor and Commonalty in the 23d year of her Reign which provides that there shall be twelve Aldermen and how upon the death or removal of an Alderman a new one should be chosen that is by the Mayor and the surviving Aldermen and the greater number of them being call'd together as the Indictment suggests by the Summons of the Mayor The whole Indictment and the Offence we are charged with being
that is to make them Iudges whether this Duty is payable or not and so the Courts of Westminster who are the proper Iudges of the Revenue of the King who by this means will be without an Appeal will be excluded Curia This Court may take Cognizance of this Matter as well as in Cases of Bastardy 't is frequent to remove those Orders into this Court though the Act says That the two next Justices may take order as well for the punishment of the Mother as also for the relief of the Parish where it was born except he give Security to appear the next Quarter Sessions The Statute doth not mention any Certiorari which shews that the intention of the Law-makers was that a Certiorari might he brought otherwise they would have enacted as they have done by several other Statutes that no Certiorari shall lie Therefore the meaning of the Act must be that the determination of the Iustices of the Peace shall be final in Matters of Fact only as if a Collector should affirm that a person hath four Chimnies when he hath but two or when the Goods distrained are sold under the value and the Overplus not returned but the Right of the Duty arising by virtue of this Act was never intended to be determined by them Then the Order was filed and Mr. Pollexfen moved that it might be quashed for that by the Statute of 14 Car. 2. 14 Car. 2. c. 10. the Occupier was only chargeable and the Land-Lord exempted Now by the Proviso in that Act such a Cottage as is expressed in this Order is likewise exempted because 't is not of greater value than 20 s. by the year and 't is not expressed that the person inhabiting the same hath any Lands of his own of the value of 20 s. per annum nor any Lands or Goods to the value of 10 l. Now there having been several abuses made of this Law to deceive the King of this Duty occasioned the making of this subsequent Act. The abuses were these viz. The taking a great House and dividing it into several Tenements and then letting them to Tenants who by reason of their poverty might pretend to be exempted from this Duty The dividing Lands from Houses so that the King was by these Practices deceived and therefore in such Cases the charge was laid upon the Land-Lord but nothing of this appearing upon the Order it was therefore quashed Brett versus Whitchot IN Replevin Lands not exempted from repairing of the High-ways by grant of the King The Defendant avowed the taking of a Cup as a Fine for a Distress towards the repairing of the High-way The Plaintiff replyed and set forth a Grant from the King by which the Lands which were chargeable to send Men for the repairing c. were exempted from that Duty And upon a Demurrer the Question was Whether the Kings Letters Patents are sufficient to exempt Lands from the Charge of the repairing of the High-ways 2 3 Ph. Mar. c. 8. which by the Statute of Philip and Mary and other subsequent Statutes are chargeable to send Men for that purpose And it was argued that such Letters Patents were not sufficient because they were granted in this Case before the making of the Statute and so by consequence before any cause of Action and to prove this a Case was cited to this purpose In 2 E. 2 Inst 569. 3. an Action was brought against an Hundred for a Robbery upon the Statute of 13 E. 1. The Bishop of Litchfield pleaded a Charter of R. 1. by which that Hundred which was held in Right of his Church was exempted c. But it was held that this Charter could not discharge the Action because no such Action was given when the Letters Patents were made but long afterwards Iudgment was given for the Avowant Upton versus Dawkin TRespass quare vi armis liberam piscariam he did break and enter and one hundred Trouts ipsius Quer. Trespass for taking Fish ipsius querentis in libera piscaria not good in the Fishery aforesaid did take and carry away Vpon Not guilty pleaded there was a Verdict for the Plaintiff and this Exception was taken in arrest of Iudgment viz. For that the Plaintiff declared in Trespass for taking so many Fish ipsius Quer. in libera piscaria which cannot be because he hath not such a property in libera piscaria to call the Fish his own Pollexfen contra If there had not been a Verdict such a Construction might have been made of this Declaration upon a Demurrer but now 't is helped and the rather because a Man may call them pisces ipsius in a free Fishery for they may be in a Trunk so a Man may have a property though not in himself as in the Case of Iointenants where 't is not in one but in both yet if one declare against the other unless he plead the Iointenancy in Abatement the Plaintiff shall recover But notwithstanding the Iudgment was reversed Dominus Rex versus ...... THE Defendant was indicted for Barretry Barretry the Evidence against him was that one G. was arrested at the Suit of C. in an Action of 4000 l. and was brought before a Iudge to give Bail to the Action and that the Defendant who was a Barrister at Law was then present and did sollicite this Suit when in truth at the same time C. was indebted to G. in 200 l. and that he did not owe the said C. one farthing The Chief Iustice was first of Opinion that this might be Maintenance but that it was not Barretry unless it appeared that the Defendant did know that C. had no cause of Action after it was brought If a Man should be arrested for a trifling Cause or for no Cause this is no Barretry though 't is a sign of a very ill Christian it being against the express Word of God But a Man may arrest another thinking he hath a just cause so to do when as in truth he hath none for he may be mistaken especially where there hath been great dealings between the Parties But if the design was not to recover his own Right but only to ruine and oppress his Neighbour that is Barretry A Man may lay out mony in behalf of another in Suits at Law to recover a just Right and this may be done in respect of the Poverty of the Party but if he lend mony to promote and stirr up Suits then he is a Barretor Now it appearing upon the Evidence that the Defendant did entertain C. in his House and brought several Actions in his Name where nothing was due that he was therefore guilty of that Crime But if an Action be first brought and then profecuted by another he is no Barretor though there is no cause of Action The Defendant was found guilty DE Termino Paschae Anno 2 Jac. II. in Banco Regis 1686. Coram Edwardo Herbert Mil ' Capital ' Justic
the person who made Oath before them The Commissioners sign the Depositions and they ought to produce them so signed to the Court and prove it for Depositions are often suppressed by Order of the Court. If a true Copy of an Affidavit made before the Chief Iustice of this Court be produced at a Trial 't is not sufficient to convict a Man of Perjury This is not like the Case of Perjury assigned in an Answer in Chancery taken in the Country for that is under the Parties Hand but here is nothing under the Defendant's Hand and therefore the Commissioners ought to be in the Court to prove him to be the Man The Court were equally divided The Chief Iustice and Wythens Iustice were of Opinion that it was not Evidence to convict the Defendant of Perjury it might have been otherwise upon the Return of a Master of Chancery for he is upon his Oath and is therefore presumed to make a good Return but Commissioners are not upon Oath they pen the Depositions according to the best of their skill and a man may call himself by another name before them without any offence The Commissioners cannot be mistaken in the Oath tho' they may not know the person for this Court may be so mistaken in those who make Affidavits here but not in the Oath if the Commissioners or the Clerk to the Commission had been here they would have been good Evidence If an Affidavit be made before a Iustice of the Peace of a Robbery as enjoyned by the Statute if you will convict the person of Perjury you must prove the swearing of the Affidavit The Attorney General perceiving the Opinion of the Court rather than the Plaintiff should be nonsuit because no Evidence could be given offered to enter a Nolle prosequi which the Court said could not be done because the Iury were sworn but he insisted upon it and said he would cause it to be entred Sir John Knight's Case AN Information was exhibited against him by the Attorney General upon the Statute of 2 E. 3. Information upon the Statute for going armed 2 E. 3. c. 3. Which prohibits all persons from coming with Force and Arms before the King's Justices c. and from going or riding armed in affray of Peace on pain to forfeit his Armour and suffer Imprisonment at the King's Pleasure This Statute is confirmed by that of R. 2. 20 R. 2.1 with an Addition of a farther punishment which is to make a Fine to the King The Information sets forth that the Defendant did walk about the Streets armed with Guns and that he went into the Church of St. Michael in Bristol in the time of Divine Service with a Gun to terrifie the King's Subjects contra formam Statuti This Case was tryed at the Bar and the Defendant was acquitted The Chief Iustice said that the meaning of the Statute of Ed. 3. was to punish People who go armed to terrifie the Kings Subjects 'T is likewise a great Offence at the Common Law as if the King was not able or willing to protect his Subjects and therefore this Act is but an affirmance of that Law and it having appointed a Penalty this Court can inflict no other Punishment than what is therein directed DE Term. Sancti Hill Anno 2 3 Jac. II. in Banco Regis 1686 7. Kingston versus Herbert A Common Recovery was suffered Anno 22 Jacobi primi Where a Scire Facias must go to the Tertenants before Judgment be reversed and a Writ of Error was brought about five years since to reverse it and Iudgment was given for the Reversal and it was now moved to set aside that Reversal because there was no Scire Facias against the Tertenants Mr. Williams who argued for the Reversal said that the want of a Scire Facias must be either in Law or in Fact it cannot be Error in Law for that must appear upon the Record it self which it doth not here It cannot be Error in Fact because there is no necessity of such a Writ 't is only discretionary in the Court and not ex necessitate juris But on the other side it was insisted that the Court cannot proceed to examine Errors before a Scire Facias is awarded to the Tertenants Dyer 320 331. for they may have a Matter to plead in Barr to the Writ as a Release c. and the Party cannot be restored to all which he hath lost by the suffering of the Recovery unless the Defendant be brought in upon the Scire Facias Curia The only Question is whether this Iudgment be well given without a Scire Facias The Secondary hath reported that the Practice is so Then as to the Ojection that such a Scire Facias is not ex necessitate juris but only discretionary 't is quite otherwise for 't is not only a cautionary Writ as all other Scire Facias but 't is a legal caution which in a manner makes it necessary 'T is true if there had been a Iudgment corruptly obtained this Court might have set it aside but if Erronice 't is a doubt whether it may be vacated but according to the Forms and Methods of Law Adjornatur Baldwin versus Flower BAron and Feme brought an Action on the Case for Words spoken of the Wife Words where actionable without special damage The Declaration was that the Defendant having some discourse with another person called the Wife Whore and that she was his Whore and concluded ad dampnum ipsorum c. The Plaintiff had a Verdict and it was now moved in arrest of Iudgment for that the Words were not actionable without alledging special damage But it was answered Rol. Abr. 35. placit 7. that the Action was well brought To say A Man is rotted with the Pox is actionable without alledging special damage because the person by such means will lose the Communication and Society of his Neighbours As to the Conclusion ad dampnum ipsorum 't is good for if she survive the Husband the Damages will go to her and so are all the Presidents Curia The Words are actionable And three Iustices were of Opinion that the Conclusion of the Declaration was as it ought to be which Iustice Wythens denied for if an Innkeepers Wife be called a Cheat and the House loses the Trade the Husband hath an injury by the Words spoken of his Wife but the Declaration must not conclude ad dampnum ipsorum Sir Thomas Grantham's Case HE bought a Monster in the Indies which was a Man of that Country who had the perfect Shape of a Child growing out of his Breast as an Excrescency all but the Head This Man he brought hither and exposed to the sight of the People for Profit The Indian turns Christian and was baptized and was detained from his Master who brought a Homine Repleg ' the Sheriff returned that he had replevied the Body but doth not say the Body in which
an Inn-keeper or common Carrier 't is usual to declare secundum legem consuetudinem Angliae for 't is not a Custom confined to a particular place but 't is such which is extensive to all the King's People The word Consuetudo might have been added 1 Inst 182. but it imports no more than Lex for Custom it self is Law If the Custom of Merchants had been left out the Defendant had then pursued his Covenant for if a Man agrees to pay Mony to such a person or his Assigns and he appoints the payment to another a tender to that person is a good performance of the Covenant But the Court were of Opinion that this was not a good Plea Panton versus the Earl of Bath A Scire Facias to have Execution of a Iudgment obtained in the Court of Oliver late Protector of England and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging Where the Pleading is good in substance tho' there is a small variation it will not hurt and in reciting the Iudgment 't is said that it was obtained before Oliver Protector of England and the Dominions thereunto belonging leaving out the word Territories And upon a Demurrer Mr. Pollexfen held this to be a variance Yelv. 212. Orde versus Moreton and like the Case where a Writ of Error was brought to remove a Record in Ejectment directed to the Bishop of Durham setting forth that the Action was between such Parties and brought before the said Bishop and seven other persons naming them and the Record removed was an Ejectment before the Bishop and eight others so that it could not be the same Record which was intended to be removed by the Writ E contra E contra It was said suppose the word Scotland should be left out of the King's Title would that be a variance The Iudicature in this Case is still the same and the Pleading is good in Substance and of that Opinion was the whole Court Hyley versus Hyley HYley had Issue W. Where the Reversion in Fee shall pass in a Will by the words viz. Remaining part of my Estate his eldest Son who had Issue Peter Charles John He by Will devised 1000 l. to his eldest Son and several parcels of Land to other Legatees Then he gave to Peter Lands in Tail Male To John a Mansion House now in question in Tail Male He devised another House to his Grandson Charles in like manner And all the rest and remaining part of his Estate he devised to his three Grandsons equally to be divided amongst them that only excepted which he had given to Peter Charles and John and to the Heirs of their Bodies whom he made Executors Then by another Clause he devised viz. That if either of his Executors die without Issue then the part or parts of him so dying shall go to the Survivor or Survivors equally to be divided John the youngest Grandson dyed without Issue and the question was whether the Reversion of his House shall be divided between his surviving Brothers or descend to his Heir And it was adjudged that the Exception in the Will did comprehend the Reversion in Fee and that it did not pass but without such an Exception it had passed * Allen 28. as where a Man devised his Mannor to another for years and part of other Lands to B. and his Heirs and all the rest of his Lands to his Brother in Tail it was held that by these words the Reversion of the Mannor did pass Anonymus NOTA. An Infant having entred into a Statute brought an Audita Querela to avoid it he was brought into the Court and two Witnesses were sworn to prove his Age and then his Appearance and Inspection were recorded he was bound in this Case with two other persons for 1600 l. and had no more than 200 l. for his share Lydcott versus Willows IN Ejectment A special Verdict was found viz. Devise of an Hereditament carries the Reversion in Fee that the Testator being seized in Fee of certain Houses in Bedfor-Bury and in Parker's Lane did by Will devise his Houses in Parker's Lane to charitable Vses then he gave several specifick Legacies to several persons named in the said Will and then he devised his Houses in Bedford-Bury to Edward Harris and Mary his Wife for their Lives then follow these words viz. The better to enable my Wife to pay my Legacies I give and bequeath to her and her Heirs all my Mesuages Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the Kingdom of England not before disposed of c. The Question was whether this Devise would carry the Reversion of the Houses in Bedford-Bury to his Wife Adjudged that it did not but that it ought to go to the Heir of the Testator who was Plaintiff in this Case It being found that Harris and his Wife were dead and that the Wife who was Executrix had sufficient Assets to pay the Legacies without the Reversion But Iustice Powel was of another Opinion for that the word Hereditament imports an Inheritance and if it had devised thus viz. the Inheritance not before disposed of the Reversion had passed Afterwards a Writ of Error was brought in the Exchequer-Chamber upon this Iudgment 2 Vent 285. and according to the Opinion of Iustice Powel the Iudgment was reversed Nota. A Rule of Court was made that no Certiorari should go to the Sessions of Ely without Motion in Court or signing of it by a Iudge in his Chamber But Mr. Pollexfen insisted that the Sessions there did not differ from other Courts and Franchises for the inferior Courts in London are of as large a Iurisdiction as any and yet a Certiorari goes to them and so it ought to go to Ely for 't is the Right of the Subject to remove his Cause hither Their course in the Royal Franchise of Ely is to hold the Sessions there twice a year viz. in March and September in which two Months the Iudges are seldom in Town and if this Court should deny a Certiorari the Court of Common Pleas would grant it Attorney General contra This Franchise of Ely is of greater Priviledge and Authority than any inferior Court for it hath many Regalia though 't is not a County Palatine A Certiorari will not lie to the Grand Sessions nor to a County Palatine to remove Civil Causes 't is true it lyeth to remove Indictments for Riots and this Franchise being truly called Royal hath equal priviledge with a County Palatine and therefore a Certiorari will not lie But no Rule was made Osborn versus Steward TRespass Distress for an Heriot where it may be taken The Case upon the Pleadings was this viz. A Lease was made of Land for 99 years if Margery and Dorothy Upton should so long live reserving a yearly Rent and an Heriot or 40 s. in lieu thereof after the death of either of them Provided that no Heriot shall be paid after the death of Margery living
Contract for that Service with the Master was at Land But the principal reason why Mariners Wages are sued for in the Admiralty is because the Ship is liable as well as the Master who may be poor and not able to answer the Seamen Curia Take a Trial upon the necessity in this Case Anonymus THE Plaintiff recovered a Verdict against the Defendant in an Action upon the Case The Defendant now moved by his Council The Court will not order a Plaintiff to file the Venire Facias that the Plaintiff should file the Venire Facias and Distringas because all Writs which are returnable in this Court ought to be filed otherwise a Damage may ensue to the Officers and a Wrong to the King upon the Forfeitures of Issues by the Iurors which are always estreated upon the coming in of the Distringas The Council insisted upon it that it was the Common Law of this Realm and that it was the Right of the Subject that all Writs which issue out of the King's Courts should be filed that the Panel of the Venire Facias is part of the Record and that an Attaint could not be brought against the Iury if these Writs were not filed because non constat de personis This matter was referred to some of the ancient Clerks of the Court and to the Secondary Aston who reported that the Court never ordered a Plaintiff to file a Venire Facias against his Will Davies 's Case TRespass against Davies and Powel for breaking of the Plaintiffs Close and chasing and killing of Fowl in his Free Warren Prescription for all the Tenants of a Mannor to fowl in a Warren good though it was objected that it was too large The Defendant as to all the Trespass but chasing and killing of the Fowl pleaded Not-Guilty and as to that he sets forth that the Dean and Chapter of Exeter were seized in Fee of the Mannor of Brampton of which the said Warren was parcel and that they and all those whose Estates they had c. had liberty for themselves their Tenants and Farmers to fowl in the said Warren that the Dean and Chapter did make a Lease of parcel of the said Mannor to the Defendants for one and twenty years reserving a Rent c. and so they justifie as Tenants c. they did fowl in the said Warren The Plaintiff replied de injuria sua propria Vpon which they were at Issue and there was a Verdict for the Defendants Mr. Pollexfen moved in arrest of Iudgment because 't is an unreasonable Prescription for an interest in every Tenant of the Mannor to fowl in that Warren It hath been so ruled for a Common Roll. Abr. 399. without saying for his Cattle Levant and Couchant for it must be for a certain number In this Case the Prescription is not only in the person of the Lord but for all his Farmers and Tenants who cannot prescribe to have a free Warren in alieno solo E contra E contra It was argued that such a Prescription might not be good upon a Demurrer but 't is well enough after a Verdict 'T is not an Objection to say that this Prescription is too large for all Tenants as well Freeholders as Copyholders to prescribe in the Soil of another and so there may not be enough for the Lord himself Yelv. 187. 2 Cro. 256. because this is a Profit apprender in alieno solo and for such the Tenants of a Mannor may prescribe by a Que estate exclusive of the Lord and of that Opinion was the Court so the Defendant had his Iudgment Anonymus NOTA. An Information was brought in this Court for throwing down of Hedges and Ditches in which there were several Defendants who pleaded specially and the Clerk of the Crown Office demanded 13 s. and 4 d. for every Name which came to 17 l. for his Fees in this Plea and by reason of the great charge the Defendants did not plead but let Iudgment go by default Mr. Pollexfen moved that the Plea might be received and that it might be enquired what Fees were due which the Court would not try upon a Motion but advised an Indictment of Extortion if their Clerk was guilty Rex versus Inhabitantes de Malden SErjeant Shaw moved to affirm an Order made upon an Appeal to the Quarter Sessions of the Peace for the County of Essex The Case was viz. Order of Sessions quashed for settling a poor Man because he had not given formal notice in writing John Pain served an Apprentiship at Malden where he married and had several Children His Wife died he marryed another Woman who had a Term for years of an House in the Parish of Heybridge where he lived for a year and left Malden Afterwards he returned to Malden was rated to the Poor and lived there two years then he dyed In a short time after his death his Widow and Children were removed by an Order of two Iustices to Heybridge from which Order they appeal and by the Order of Sessions they were declared to be Inhabitants of Malden It was now moved by Mr. Pollexfen to quash it because it doth not appear that he gave any formal Notice in Writing to the Overseers of Malden when he returned from Heybridge and therefore ought to be settled there and not at Malden for being taxed to the Poor will not amount to Notice and he cited a stronger Case which was viz. The Churchwardens of Covent Garden certified under their Hands that such a person was an Inhabitant within their Parish but because no Note was left with them pursuant to the Statute notwithstanding such Certificate he was held to be no Inhabitant within their Parish and of that Opinion was all the Court. Anonymus IN Replevin three persons made Cognizance as Bayliffs to A. Whether an Infant should make Cognizance per Attorn or per Guardianum and so justifie the taking of the Cattle Damage Feasant in his Ground The Plaintiff replied that the Cattle were taken in his Ground and traverseth the taking in the place mentioned in the Cognizance There was Iudgment for the Defendant upon which a Writ of Error was brought and the Error assigned was that one of the Bayliffs was an Infant and made Cognizance per Attornatum when he ought to do it per Guardianum Mr. 2 Cro. 441. 2 Sand 212. 1 Rol. Abr. 228. 3 Cro. 441. Pollexfen This might be pleaded in Abatement but 't is not Error for an Infant Administrator may bring an Action of Debt per Attornatum because he sues in the Right of another and so his Infancy shall be no impediment to him The Bayliff in this Case is as much a Plaintiff as the Administrator in the other for he makes Cognizance in the Right of another and in such case if two are of Age and one is not they who are of Age may make an Attorney for him who is not So if there are two
quarter for by such means Diseases may be brought into a Family and a Man hath no security either for his Goods or Mony This was the Opinion of Iustice Twisden in Coutrell's Case Sid. 29. and it seems to be very natural and therefore the chief reason why power was given by the Statute to the Overseers to raise mony was that they might place poor Children to such who were willing to take them for Mony for otherwise they might compel a Man to receive his Enemy into his Service He relied on the Case of the King and Price Hillary 29 and 30th of Car. II. which was an Order of the like nature moved to be quashed And Iustice Twisden said in that Case that all the Iudges of England were of Opinion that the Iustices had not such a Power and therefore that Order was quashed 'T is plain that by the Statute of the 43 Eliz. E contra the Iustices may place out poor Children where they see it convenient and so the constant practice hath been so is the Resolution of the Iudges in Dalton which was brought in by the Lord Chief Iustice Hyde but denied so to be by Iustice Twisden for no other reason but because Iustice Jones did not concur with them In Price 's Case this matter was stirred again but there hath been nothing done pursuant to that Opinion Since then the Iustices have a power to place out poor Children 'T is no Objection to say that there may be an inconvenience in the exercise of that power by placing out Children to improper persons for if such things are done the Party hath a proper remedy by way of Appeal to the Sessions Three Iustices were of Opinion that the Iustices of Peace had such a Power and therefore they were for confirming the Order and Iustice Dolbin said it was so resolved in the Case of the King and Gilliflower in the Reign of King James the first Foster being then Chief Iustice tho' the Iudges in Price 's Case were of another Opinion The Chief Iustice was now likewise of a different Opinion for the Statute means something when it says that a Stock shall be raised by the Taxation of every Inhabitant c. for putting out of Children Apprentice There are no compulsory words in the Statute for that purpose nor any which oblige a Master to take an Apprentice and if not the Iustices have not power to compel a Man to take a poor Boy for possibly such may be a Thief or Spy in the Family But this Order was quashed for an apparent fault which was that the Statute has entrusted the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor by and with the Approbation of two Iustices to bind Apprentices c. And the Churchwardens are not mentioned in this Order DE Term. Sancti Hill Anno 1 Gulielmi Mariae Regis Reginae in Banco Regis 1689. Thirsby versus Helbot DEBT upon a Bond for performance of an Award Award void where a person who is a Stranger to the Submission is ordered to be a Surety Vpon Nullum Arbitrium pleaded the Plaintiff replyed and shewed an Award made which amongst other things was that the Defendant should be bound with Sureties such as the Plaintiff should approve in the Sum of 150 l. to be paid to him at such a time and that they should seal mutual Releases and assigned a Breach in not giving of this Bond. There was a Verdict for the Plaintiff and now Serjeant Pemberton moved in arrest of Iudgment that this was a void Award because 't is that the Defendant shall be bound with Sureties c. and then Releases to be given now the Sureties are Strangers to the Submission and therefore the Defendant is not bound to procure them He relied upon the Case of Barns and Fairchild 1 Roll. Abr. 259. which was an Award that all Controversies c. should cease and that one of the Parties should pay to the other 8 l. and that thereupon he should procure his Wife and Son to make such an Assurance c. this was held to be void because it was to bind such persons who were not Parties to the Submission Tremain Serjeant contra E contra That Cause doth not come up to this at the Barr because by this Award the Party was to sign a general Release whether the Defendant paid the Mony or not But the Court was of Opinion that the Award was void because it appointed the Party to enter into a Bond with such Sureties as the Plaintiff shall like and Releases then to be mutually given Now if the Plaintiff doth not like the Security given then he is not to seal a Release and so 't is but an Award of one side Savier versus Lenthal ASsisa ven ' recogn ' si Willielmus Lenthal Armiger Henricus Glover Armiger Johannes Philpot Generosus Thomas Cook Generosus Samuel Ellis Generosus injuste c. Assize disseisiverunt Thomam Savier de libero tenemento suo in Westm infra triginta annos c. Et unde idem Thomas Savier per Jacobum Holton Attornatum suum queritur quod disseisiverunt eum de officio Marr ' Maresc ' Domini Regis Dominae Reginae coram ipso Rege Regina cum pertin ' c. The Cryer made Proclamation and then called the Recognitors between Thomas Savier Demandant and William Lenthal Tenant who were all at the Bar and severally answered as they were called Then Mr. Goodwin of Greys-Inn arraigned the Assize in French but the Count being not in Parchment upon Record the Recognitors were for this time discharged and ordered to appear again the next day But the Council for the Tenant relied on the authority in Calvert's Case that the Title ought to be set forth in the Count Plo. Com. 403. 4 E. 4.6 which was not done now and therefore the Demandant ought to be nonsuited But the Writ being returnable that day was ex gratia Curiae adjourned to the Morrow afterward and if the Demandant did not then make a Title he must be nonsuited The next day the Iury appeared Then the Cryer called Thomas Savier the Demandant and then the Tenants and afterwards the Recognitors and the Assize being arraigned again the Demandant set forth his Title Then Sir Francis Winnington of Council for Mr. Lenthal one of the Tenants appeared after this manner Vouz avez icy le dit Williem Lenthal jeo prye oyer del Brief del Count. Then the other Tenants were called again three times and they not appearing Process was prayed against them Doe versus Dawson BAil was put in to an Action brought by the Plaintiff Bail liable if the Principal had two Terms after an Injunction dissolved and before he declared the Defendant obtained an Injunction to stay Proceedings at Law which was not dissolved for several Terms afterwards Then the Injunction was dissolved and the Plaintiff delivered his Declaration and had Iudgment by default